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2018 Blavatnik National Awards Ceremony

Over 200 guests attended the 2018 ceremony, including some of the country’s most prominent figures in science, business, and philanthropy.

Published September 24, 2018

By Kamala Murthy

On Monday, September 24, 2018, the Blavatnik Family Foundation hosted the fifth Blavatnik National Awards Ceremony at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

Dr. Marc Tessier-Lavigne, President of Stanford University and renowned neuroscientist, served as the Master of Ceremonies, and musicians from the Juilliard School Orchestra performed throughout the evening. The three 2018 Blavatnik National Laureates were presented with their medals by Len Blavatnik, the Founder and Chairman of Access Industries and the Blavatnik Family Foundation, and each gave a short presentation on their research.

Life Sciences

Life Sciences Laureate Janelle Ayres, PhD, of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, was recognized for her pioneering research on disease tolerance and host-pathogen interactions. Dr. Ayres’ research has the potential to solve one of the greatest current public health threats: anti-microbial resistance.  Dr. Ayres’ mentor and friend, Dr. Ruslan Medzhitov, a 2007 Winner of the Blavatnik Awards himself, said “Janelle’s work opened a new dimension to understanding host-microbial interactions to understanding infectious diseases. That created a whole new discipline within immunology and even within infectious diseases.”

Physical Sciences & Engineering

Physical Sciences & Engineering Laureate Sergei V. Kalinin, PhD, of Oak Ridge National Laboratory was celebrated for creating novel techniques to study, measure, and control the functionality of nanomaterials at the atomic and nanoscale. Dr. Kalinin’s work in manipulating individual atoms has the potential to enable scientists to create new classes of materials by assembling matter atom-by-atom. “Sergei is on a dramatically sharp trajectory,” said Dr. Dawn Bonnell, Vice Provost for Research, Professor of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Pennsylvania, and Sergei’s former PhD advisor. She added, “he has the willingness, the intellectual capability to take what he needs from a variety of different fields to implement his ideas and bring them to fruition.”

Chemistry

Chemistry Laureate Neal K. Devaraj, PhD, of the University of California, San Diego, was honored for his transformative work on the synthesis of artificial cells and membranes, which has created an exciting new field of research that aims to bring greater understanding to the origins of life, a major goal in synthetic biology. “Neal is really a singularity in the world of chemical biology. It takes a lot of depth and insight into chemistry to be able to invent new chemical reactions, but at the same time he has depth as a biologist,” commented Dr. Carolyn Bertozzi, Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Chemical & Systems Biology and Radiology at Stanford University, and Neal’s mentor.

A Distinguished Jury, A Robust Pool of Candidates

A distinguished jury selected these three National Laureates from 286 nominations submitted by 146 research institutions across 42 States.

Twenty-eight 2018 Blavatnik National Finalists were also honored during the evening. Dr. Tessier-Lavigne stated that 45% of this year’s honorees were immigrants hailing from nine different countries. Since the Awards inception in 2007, 249 scientists and engineers from 44 countries across six continents have been recognized by the Blavatnik Awards. As a native of Canada, he remarked, “I feel a special bond with all of them as an immigrant myself.” Dr. Tessier-Lavigne concluded the ceremony with a ‘fireside chat’ with the three Laureates, posing questions related to the future of their respective disciplines and the importance of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) education.

Distinguished guests who attended the ceremony include:

  • 2001 Nobel Laureate Dr. Barry Sharpless of The Scripps Research Institute
  • 2006 Nobel Laureate Dr. Roger D. Kornberg of Stanford University
  • 2000 Nobel Laureate Dr. Eric Kandel of Columbia University
  • Dr. Andrew Hamilton, President of New York University
  • Dr. Lawrence S. Bacow, President of Harvard University
  • Dr. Eric Lander, Director and Founder of the Broad Institute
  • Dr. Bruce Stillman, President and CEO of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
  • Prof. Nili Cohen, President of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities
  • Prof. Joseph KIafter, President of Tel Aviv University
  • Warner Music Group CEO, Steve Cooper
  • Australian writerdirectorproducer Baz Luhrmann.

View the photos from the event.

To learn more about the Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists, visit blavatnikawards.org.


Author

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Kamala Murthy
Associate Director of Communications
Kamala is Associate Director of Communications at The New York Academy of Sciences, where she leads strategic communications for the Academy’s programming, including its prestigious Awards and Fellowship portfolio. Since joining the Academy in 2017, she has worked closely with scientists to translate complex research into accessible stories that reach broader audiences and drive meaningful impact. Kamala holds a BA in Sociology from Barnard College, Columbia University, and brings two decades of experience across science, healthcare, biotech, and pharmaceutical public relations.